Smith v. Jennings

45 S.E. 821, 67 S.C. 324, 1903 S.C. LEXIS 172
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedSeptember 10, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 45 S.E. 821 (Smith v. Jennings) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Jennings, 45 S.E. 821, 67 S.C. 324, 1903 S.C. LEXIS 172 (S.C. 1903).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Jones.

This is an application in the original jurisdiction of this Court for an order restraining the State treasurer from acting pursuant to a joint resolution of the General Assembly, which requires the State treasurer “to write off of the books in his office and no longer carry o,n the books as a debt of the State” certain bonds entered on the books of the State treasurer as “Old bonds not fundable (act of 1896) Blue Ridge Railroad bonds, $37,000.” The petitioner attacks the constitutionality of said joint resolution upon several grounds, issue thereof being made by demurrer of respondent to the petition. We will not undertake to set out in detail the allegations of the petition. It is sufficient to say that the bonds referred to are the “lost bonds” which the receiver of “The State Bank!’ unsuccessfully sought to have funded on the case of Samuel Lord, receiver, v. W. T. C. Bates, State treasurer, 48 S. C., 95, and that the petitioner, H. A. M. Smith, as receiver, sue *326 ceecls to all the rights of said bank with respect to said lost bonds.

The joint resolution is as follows:

“A Joint Resolution to authorize and require the State treasurer to write off of the books in his office certain bonds entered on said books as cOld Bonds not Fundable (Act of i8p6), Blue Ridge Railroad Bonds, $37,000/
“Be it Resolved by the General Assembly of the State of South Carolina:
“Section 1. That-whereas by an act of the legislature of 1896, the treasurer of this State is forbidden to pay, consolidate or fund any coupon bonds of the State after the expiration of twenty years from the date of maturity of such bonds, and certain bonds entered on the books of the State treasurer as ‘Old bonds not fundable (act of 1896), Blue Ridge Railroad bonds, $37,000/ are still carried on the books of the State treasurer. Therefore, be it Resolved: That the State treasurer be, and is hereby, authorized and required to write said bonds off of the books in his office, and no longer carry said bonds on the books as a debt of the State/1 Stat. 1903, 24 Stat., p. 2C6.

It is claimed that this joint resolution has not the force of law, and violates the following constitutional provisions:

1. Sec. 23, of article IV., of the Constitution of the State of South Carolina, which requires (a) two-thirds of each house (i. e., two-thirds of all the members, not of a constitutional quorum of each house,) to pass a bill or joint resolution that has been unapproved and unsigned by the governor; and (b) a re-turn to and rc-consideration by the same, not a new, General Assembly of such bill or joint resolution.

2. Sec. 16, of article III., of the Constitution of the State of South Carolina, which provides that “The style of all laws shall be: ‘Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State of South Carolina.’ ” And

3. Sec. 8, of art. L, of the Constitution of the State of South Carolina, which provides that “No * * * law impairing the obligation of contracts * * * shall be passed * * *327 and also the first clause of section 10, .of article I., of the Constitution of the United States of America, which provides that "No State shall * * * pass any * * * law impairing the obligation of contracts * * *”

1. The question presented under sec. 28, art. IV., of the Constitution, is whether the language, “two-thirds of that house,” means two-thirds of the total membership of the Senate, which consists of forty-one members, and two-thirds of the total membership of the House of Representatives, which consists of one hundred and twenty-four members, or means two-thirds of the members of each of said bodies voting upon the question, a quorum being present. The joint resolution was passed by’ the General Assembly on February 22d, 1902, on which day the regular session of 1902 adjourned sine die. The joint resolution having been presented to the governor, and the General Assembly having by adjournment prevented its return within three days, the governor sent it unapproved and ■ unsigned and with his objection to the Senate, where it originated, within two days after the meeting of the General Assembly which convened on Tuesday, the 13th day of January, 1903. On the 19th day of February, 1903, the Senate by a vote of twenty-five to eleven, out of a membership of forty-one, passed the joint resolution, the veto of his excellency the governor to the contrary notwithstanding; but immediately thereupon reconsidered its said action, and on February 20th, 1903, passed the joint resolution over the governor’s veto by a vote of twenty-eight to thirteen. Thereupon the joint resolution, together with the governor’s objection, the veto, was sent to the House of Representatives, which body on same day, February 20, 1903, by a vote of sixty to twenty-five, out of a total membership of one hundred and twenty-four, passed the joint resolution over the governor’s veto1.

*328 1 *327 Treating a vote upon the passage of the joint resolution over the governor’s veto as upon the reconsideration of the original resolution, it is not a judicial question whether the Senate had the right to reconsider the vote upon such *328 reconsideration. That is merely a matter of parliamentary procedure which each body by special rule may, and usually does, regulate for itself. As a judicial question we accept the result as shown by the Senate Journal of February 20, 1903, and set forth in the petition, as one reached in accordance with the rules of the body. So that it appears that the Senate’s action is unquestionable under either construction of the Constitution. Our further consideration of this question will, therefore, be confined to the action of the House of Representatives.

2 While the Constitution in art. III., sec. 3, declares that the House of Representatives shall consist of one hundred and twenty-four members, it also' declares in sec. 4, art. III., that a majority of each house shall constitute a quorum to do business. A quorum, therefore, possesses the power of the whole body in all matters of business wherein the action of a larger proportion of the entire membership is not clearly and expressly required. So, ordinarily, when a quorum is present acting, the “House” is present acting in all its potentiality. When the Constitution speaks of “two-thirds of that house” as the vote required to pass a bill or joint resolution over the veto of the governor, it means two-thirds of the house as then legally constituted and acting upon the matter. Whenever the framers of the Constitution intended otherwise, the purpose was expressly declared, as in art XV., sec. 1, “a vote of two-thirds of all members elected

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Bluebook (online)
45 S.E. 821, 67 S.C. 324, 1903 S.C. LEXIS 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-jennings-sc-1903.